On Wed, Oct 22 2008, Marcin Borkowski wrote:
What are the problems with emacs?
Here is the (unordered) list of what I remember at the moment.
* It almost never knows when to launch "View"; it almost always offers me to "ConTeXt" the file.
Hello Marcin,
Right, this is a bug. I could make a bug report for that issue.
I haven't done this before, because I don't really need this feature:
- I open a ConTeXt file
- then I begin with the View command to open an xpdf window
- then I only need ConTeXt commands, that refresh automatically the xpdf
window (C-c C-c return)
Customization code for TeX-command-list:
("ConTeXt" "context --once --nonstopmode %t; xpdfcheck \"%s\" &&
xpdf -remote \"%s\" -reload" TeX-run-TeX nil (context-mode) :help
"Run ConTeXt once") ("ConTeXt Full" "context --nonstopmode %t;
xpdfcheck \"%s\" && xpdf -remote \"%s\" -reload" TeX-run-TeX nil
(context-mode) :help "Run ConTeXt until completion")
This is xpdfcheck.c :
#include
* (This is probably related to the previous one.) When finished compilation, it says "ConTeXt: problems after {1} page." or something like this.
Indeed, this should be mentioned in the bug report.
* When finding files, it offers me to find not only the .tex file, but also all the .tui, .tuo stuff etc. by default, which is rather inconvenient.
(setq completion-ignored-extensions (append completion-ignored-extensions '(".tui" ".tuo")))
* It has no idea about most of ConTeXt commands, e.g., it tries to insert {} after ConTeXt commands put by C-c C-m.
Don't know about this one, I just type the command (often with the help of "dabbrev-expand").
* Unlike when editing LaTeX files, it does not insert an \item when doing C-c C-e itemize. I use itemizations a lot and this is a bit annoying, especially that I got used to its behaior when doing LaTeX. Also, having C-c C-j asking about the (optional) label all the time is also tiring, I would prefer to be asked for it only with C-u C-c C-j.
This is also annoying to me. I'll try to solve this, should no be too complicated I think (only problem I have, is no spare time, just like you...).
* By default, being in dvi or pdf mode doesn't matter: you always end up with a pdf file. This is fine when you have a fast computer, but on low-end, older ones (like mine;)) xdvi is *a lot* faster than xpdf.
Start xpdf just once, then use only "xpdf -reload". Besides, there are more and more issues with dvi, since it's no more supported by ConTeXt (clipping of figures, protrusion with TTF and perhaps a lot more). So I consider dvi as obsolete. Cheers, Peter -- http://pmrb.free.fr/contact/